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Richard Nixon Presidential Library White House Special Files Collection Folder List Box Number Folder Number Document Date Document Type Document Description 62 28 n.d. Report Voting Record of Incumbent Assemblyman from West Contra Costa, California. 12pp. 62 28 n.d. Report "The First Step" - Proposal for creation of campaign organization around incumbent assemblyman of West Contra Costa, California. 2pp. 62 28 04/24/1962 Letter H.R. Haldeman to William Scholz. Re: Impossiblity of endorsing Newman Marsilius per endorsement policy. 3pp. w/attachments. (1pg. Not scanned) 62 28 04/24/1962 Letter H.R. Haldeman to Jack Zeigler. Re: Impossibility of endorsing Richard G. Christensen per endorsement policy. 4pp. w/ attachments. Thursday, September 06, 2007 Page 1 of 1 AS A PUBLIC SERVICE TO INDUSTRY IN THE 11TH ASSEMBLY DISTRICT OF CONTRA COSTA COUNTY, THE WEST CONTRA COSTA REPUBLICAN ASSEMBLY PROVIDES THE ATTACHED INFORMATION PERTAINING TO THE VOTING RECORD OF THE INCUMBENT ASSEMBLYMAN FROM THIS DISTRICT IN THE STATE LEGISLATURE. THIS INFORMATION, COMPILED FROM THE OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE CALIFORNIA STATE LEGISLATURE. PORTIONS WERE RECENTLY PUBLISHED BY THE CALIFORNIA STATE LABOR COUNCIL, AFL-CIO. THE INCUMBENT ASSEMBLYMAN IS JOHN KNOX. RE IS A DEMOCRAT. MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 5 Introduced by Burton. Eligibility for old age assistance. See Note #1 Eliminates citizenship requirements for old age assistance. AYE Assembly Bill No. 69 Introduced by Burton. Discrimination by persons holding State issued licenses. Requires the suspension or revocation of any AYE license issued by the State authorizing the conduct of any profession, vocation or calling, upon the showing the licensee has engaged in a persistent course of conduct of discrimination against persons requesting performance of services, based solely upon race, creed, color or national origin. Assembly Bill No. 234 Introduced by Crown. Unemployment disability compensation financing. Requires the Director to requisition the 1944 and 1945 AYE See Note #2 worker contributions in the Unemployment Trust Fund for deposit in the Disability Fund: and provides. in respect to making up annual deficits in extended liability account in Disability Fund, for removal of upper limits on assessments of voluntary plan carriero for such purposes and upper limits ou amounts otherwise to be credited; and specifics that interest augmentations shall be deposited rather than credited to the account. - 1 - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 329 Introduced by Waldie. Increases minimum weekly temporary disability indemnity payment from $20 to $25, and maximum AYE weekly amount of such payment from $65 to $150. Increases minimum weekly permanent disability indemnity payment from $20. to $25, and maximum weekly amount of such payment from $52.50 to $150. Increases from $52.50 to $150 the weakly permanent disability indemnity payment for a minor whose probable earnings cannot be reasonably determined. Repeals provisions on average annual earnings. Assembly Bill No. 370 Introduced by Crown. Deletes provision providing that a prospective voter may be challenged at the voting AYE precinct on the ground that he cannot read as required by the Constitution, and it does not appear by statement in the affidavit of registration that he is entitled to vote notwithstanding such inability. Assembly Bill No. 425 Introduced by Burton. ( See Page 3 ) AYE ON PASSAGE. Assembly Bill No. 502 Introduced by Waldie. Prohibits consideration of pregnancy in determining ability to work and availability for work prior AYE to expiration of eighth month, upon certification by physician of ability to perform suitable work, and absence of undue / restrictions on acceptable work. Prohibits consideration, in determinations RE: work ability and availability of women prior to expiration of eighth month of pregnancy, of refusal of employers to employ pregnant women. - 1,A - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 238 Introduced by Crown. Benefit Overpayment. Eliminates from provisions barring department's recovery of overpayments AYE See Note #2 received without fault of recipient, language which makes bar operative only if recovery would be against equity and good conscience. Assembly Bill No. 278 Introduced by Waldi. Workmen's Compensation. Provides rehabilitation benefits to one suffering a permanent industrial AYE injury, Assembly Bill No. 326 Introduced by Waldie. Burial expenses. Increases maximum expenses from $ 600 to $ 750. AYE Assembly Bill No. 337 Introduced by Elliott. Dismissal of Certificated employees of school districts. Requires that probationary employees of any AYE school district, rather than districts having an average daily attendance of 85,000 or more, be dismissed for cause only. Specifies that the hearing provided by the existing law for a dismissed employee is a hearing to determine the cause of his dismissal. Requires that no employee be denied the right to such hearing. Assembly Bill No. 338 Introduced by Unrub. 01d Age Assistance. Eliminates relatives' responsibility requirements in Old Age Security Law. AYE See Note #1 - 2 - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED + Assembly Bill No. 402 Introduced by Ricks. "Hot cargo" and secondary boycotts. Deletes ( from the State Labor Code ) provisions relating AYE to "hot cargo" and "cecondary boycotts." Assembly Bill No. 404 Introduced by Hicks. Employee Wage Statements. Requires separate itemisation of all payments made to bealth or AYE welfare, pension, vacation or other fringe benefit programs, whether made directly with respect to hours employed or the result of deduction from wages paid, rather than show all deductions as one aggregate item. Assembly Bill No. 405 Introduced by llicks. Employee wage statements. Requires that statement identify employer and employee, AYE and specify period of payment, rate, number of hours and Sea Note #2 all Geductions, separately stated, upon detachment part of check, rather then show only deductions, with those authorized by employee shown in one aggregate item. Assembly Bill No. 425 Introduced by Burton. Labor disputes. Prohibits granting of a restraining order or injunction by any judge or court in my case between an employer and employees, or between employers and employees, or between ABSENT employees, OT between persons employed and persons seeking employment, or their representatives, involving or growing out of a dispute concerning terms or conditions of employment, unless necessary to prevent irreparable injury to property or See Note #2 a property right of the party making the application, for which there is no adequate remedy at Law. Forbids any restraining or injunction granted under the above provisions from prohibiting certain listed activities, and specifies that none of the listed activities shall be considered or held to be a violation of any law of this State. Repeals provisions relating to jurisdictional strikes, and provisions relating to "hot cargo" and "secondary boycotts." - S ADDR MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 684 Introduced by Rumford. Minimum wages. Provides for minimum wage of $ 1.25 for any man, woman AYE or child. Assembly Dill No. 684 Same 28 above. ON PASSAGE. AYE Assembly Bill No. 728 Introduced by Burton. Aid to needy dicabled. Eliminates relatives' responsibility requirements imposed AYC with respect to aid to the needy disabled law. States that the elimination of such requirements shall not be deemed to See Note #2 eliminate the moral responsibility of a child to support his parents. Assembly Bill No. 730 Introduced by Burton. Aid to the blind. Eliminates relatives' responsibility requirements imposed AYE with respect to the aid to the potentially celf-supporting blind law. States that the elimination of such requirements See Note #2 shall not be deemed to relieve a child of his moral responsibility to support his parent. Assembly Bill No. 801 Introduced by Hawkins. Discrimination in housing. Extends present law prohibiting discrimination because of race, color, religion, national origin or encestry in the AYE selling, renting 01 leasing of publically assisted housing accomodations to all housing accomodations except a single-unit dwelling occupied in whole or in part by the owner CO his residence. Extends prohibition against discrimination to financial institutions and real estate brokers and salesmen. Declares it unlawful for any person to aid, encourage, or compell the commission of any discriminatory acts prohibited by the act or the present law, or to attempt to do BO. Authorizes the State Fair Employment Practice Commission to prevent violations of the act, and establishes a procedure for its Continued - 4 - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 637 Introduced by Rees. Includes members of a marshal's office within provisions relating to presumption that certain injuries AYE arose in the course of employment for purposes of workmen's compensation. Assembly Bill No. 698 Introduced by Caffney. Requires contractors in the Building & Construction Industry to post cash 02 securities with a bank, AYE trust company or a bond with the Labor Commissioner for the payment of wages and fringe benefits. Prevides failure to comply is misdemeanor and causes automatic revocation of licenses until unsecured obligations are satisfied and lawfully complied with. Assembly Bill No. 800 Introduced by Unruh. Makes apprepriation for support of state government for 1961-62 fiscal year. To take effect immediately, NO urgency measure. (Vote was on Busternd ammendment to delete proposed new position and salary of associate consumer counsel from budget). Assembly Dill No. 800 ON PASSAGE OF BUDGET WITHOUT DUSTERUD AMMENDMENT. AYE (Same as above.) Assembly Bill No. 1093 Introduced by Unruh. Provides that an individual with seniority who is on lay-off and recalled less than 14 days prior to any AYE leaving because of a trade dispute is not disqualified for such leaving. 4,A - --- MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 801 investigation and action on complaints of alleged violations. Authorizes the commission, following the filing of a @Continued) comlains, to file with the county recorder a notice that It has taken jurisdiction of the complaint relating to the rearing or onle of certain property within the county. Provides that this chell be notice to Rll persons of the alleged violation, Declares it to be a middemeanor to interfer with the comission in its performance of duties, or to violate an order of the commission. Assembly Dill No. 1021 Introduced by Illioti. Employment agencies: application by, end placement of, minoro. Deletes provision prohibiting employment agencies from accepting conlication AYE for employment of a minor for employment in violation of child labor laws. Prohibits employment agency from accepting application or making placement of minor under 16 years. Prohibito collection of placement fee from minor between 16 and 18 years. Prohibito employment agency from placing or attempting to place a minor in employment in violation of provisions of the Education Code relating to their employment. Accembly Bill No. 1034 Introduced by Meyers. State Civil Service Re-employment priority. Changes the sequence of the certification of names from state AYE civil service eligible lists by placing the general re-employment list ahead of the promotional lists. Accembly Dill Ko. 1045 Introduced by Geo. E. Drown. Labor camps and employee housing. Adds employee housing to definition of "camp". Provides that See Note #1 area set acide and provided by employer for camping or housing AYE which is occupied or designed for occupancy by S or more - Continued - 5 - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 1095 Introduced by Unruh. Revises provision fixing disqualification for misconduct discharge or voluntary leaving without good cause AYE at the week in which individual first registered for work and the four weeks which immediately follow, to fix it at the week in which he first registers for work and for not more than the four weeks immediately following. Assembly Bill No. 1098 Introduced by Unruh. Nalces it a misdemeanor, the employers failure to comply with requirements concerning the posting of employees' AYE benefit rights and other prescribed information, or failure to supply new employees with printed information statements and materials relating to benefit claims. Assembly Bill No. 1220 Introduced by Rumford. Changes the maximum tax rate of the district from one cent to two cents on each $100 of assessed valuation of NO all the property /in the district. To take effect immediately, Urgency Measure. Assembly Bill No. 1848 Introduced by Hanna. Excludes from injuries and deaths covered by workmen's compensation injuries caused by attempted suicide and NO deaths caused by suicide. Assembly Bill No. 1349 Introduced by Hanna. Exempto from injuries covered under the Workmen's Compensation Law an injury sustained in an altercation NO in which the injured employee was the physical aggressor. - S,A . - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 1045 employees is "camp", rather than area set aside and provided for camping for 5 or more employees. Provides (Continued) that prescribed health standards apply to all occupants of a camp or employee housing. Requires registration of existing end proposed camps and employee housing with See Note #1 Division of Housing, and prescribes information to be furnished at time of registration. Assembly Bill No. 1213 Introduced by Hawkins. Liens for County Hospital care. Provides that the cost of county hospitalization shall not AYE constitute. a lien against the real property of a recipient of Old Age assistance. Assembly Bill No. 1372 Introduced by Elliott. Declares it to be the public policy of the State that to cope with problem of rehabilitation or redevelopment of clum or blighted areas designated factors which are smong the principal couses of such areas are to be taken into consideration and that such ABSENT programs are to be undertaken and operated in such manner 28 not just to exchange new alums for old slums or to congest individuals from one clum to another clum. Requires redevelopment agency to provide rental units for persons displaced by community redevelopment or urban renewal projects. Prohibits agency from using the right of eminent domain for this purpose or operating a rental establishment. Authorizes redevelopment agency to build and sell homes at cost to homeowners displaced by projects. Provides that there shall be no discrimination in the undertaking or operation of provisions regarding housing for persons displaced by projects because of race, color, religion, national origin, or ancestry. 6 MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 1382 Introduced by Munnell. Eliminates from definition of unemployed individual for benefit purposes, provision that remuneration AYE for any person service whether performed as employee or independent contractor shall be considered wage receipts. Assembly Bill No. 1502 Introduced by Burton. Adds provision requiring certain specified information be furnished employees on check stub, draft or AYE in voucher or in separate statement. Assembly Bill No. 1554 Introduced by O'Connell. Provides that elective officers whose term of service is fixed by the Constitution, rather than public AYE officers and employees generally, shall take the oath prescribed by Art. XX, Sec. 3 Cal. Const. Prescribes form of oath or affirmation to be taken by other public officers and by public employees, which is the same as the oath or affirmation required of military and naval officers of the United States. Assembly Bill No. 1593 Introduced by Winton. Creates in the state government the following agencies: Health & Welfare Agency, consisting of the departments of AYE Social Welfare, Mental Hygiene, and Public Health; Youth & Adult Corrections Agency, consisting of the departments of Corrections & Youth Authority; and the Agriculture and Resources Agency, consisting of the Departments of Agriculture, Conservation, Fish & Game, Parks & Recreation, and Water Resources. Places each agency under supervision of an administrator appointed by the Governor. Gives administrator power of general supervision over each department or unit within the agency. Requires the administrator to develop and report to the Governor on the legislative, budgetary, and administrative programs for his agency. Abolishes Dept. of Natural Resources. Creates Dept. of Parks & Recreation to succeed to functions of Dept. of Natural Resources exercised through its divisions of Beaches & Parks, Small Craft Harbors, and Recreation. Creates Dept. of Conservation to succeed to functions of Dept. of Natural Resources exercized through its divisions of Forestry, Mines, Oil & Gas, and Soil Conservation. (Continued) - 6,A - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 1593 Places State Water Rights Board, State Water Pollution Control Board, and each regional water pollution control board in the (Continued) Dept. of Water Resources. Places Colorado River Board of California in the Dept. of Water Resources. Effective June 30, 1962, abolishes the board and office of Colorado River Commissioner and transfers all of their functions to the Dept. of Water Resources. Abolishes Poultry Improvement Commission and transfers functions to Dept. of Agriculture. Revises membership of Board of Corrections. To become operative October 1, 1961. Assembly Bill No. 1723 Introduced by Petris. Authorizes the Governor to propose reorganization plans affecting state-wide executive agencies at any session of the AYE Legislature within a prescribed period after commoncement of the session. Such plans may supersede statutory provisions, but may not affect functions vested in state agencies by the Constitution. Any such plan is subject to referendum procedures and takes effect on the 91st day following adjournment of the legislative session to which presented, unless a majority of the elected members of both houses adopt a resolution disapproving the plan. Becomes operative upon the adoption by the voters of a ratifying constitutional amendment. Assembly Bill No. 2171 Introduced by Hawkins. Provides that apprenticeship Council and Division of Apprenticeship Standards may foster and promote on-the- AYE job training programs others than apprenticeship. Assembly Bill No. 2836 Introduced by Garrius. Requires all publicly held companies, other than those specifically exempted, to send annual and quarterly reports AYE to their shareholders and to the commissioner of corporations. Requires certain of the reports to be audited. Requires such companies to hold annual shareholder meetings and to send out proxies for such meetings. Defines such companies as companies with 100 or more shareholders. Makes it a misdemeanor to violate these provisions and gives the commissioner the injunctive power to enforce these provisions. - 6,B - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 1882 Introduced by Munnell. Unemployed individual. Eliminates from definition of unemployed individual for AYE benefit purposes, provision that remmeration for any personal services whether performed as employee or independent contractor shall be considered wage receipts. Assembly Bill No. 1663 Introduced by Hawkins, Agricultural employment. Eliminates provisions exempting from unemployment incurance AYE laws employment in agriculture. Assembly BILL No. 1860 william real property. Declares void every provision in = written instrument relating to real property which provision restricts AYE the conveyance, encumberances, leaning or mortgaging thereof to any person of a specific race, color, religion, ancestory, or national origin and every restriction as to the use or occupation of real property because of the user's or occupier's race, color, religion, ancestry, or national origin. Declares void every restriction upon the transfer of title to real property which restriction directly or indirectly limits the acquisition, use or occupation of such property because of the acquirer's, user's or occupier's race, color, religion, ancestry or national origin. Requires every policy of title insurance issued after effective date of section to set forth provisions of Sec. 53, Civ. C., provided as above. Assembly Bill No. 1976 Introduced by Unxuh. ( At the request of the Governor ) Employment of older workers. Prohibits an employer from discriminating against employees and prospective employees on the basis of age. Requires the Department ABSENT of Employment to cooperate with public and private agencies in providing jobs, counselling and placement services for older workers and in developing employment programs for older workers. - Continued - - 7 - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 1976 Requires the Department to carry on a continuing program concerning the problems of older workers in beeking, ( Continued ) obtaining, and holding employment, and authorizes the department to create local advisory agencies to study such problems, to foster cooperation among various groups within the State and to make recommendations relating to the employment of older workers and the elimination of discrimination on the basis of age. Assembly Bill No. 2394 Introduced by Burton. Community Redevelopment. Deletes prohibition against transfer by a community AYE redevelopment agency of public properties to a housing authority or public agency for low-rent public housing projects. Allows a community redevelopment agency to sell, lease or donate real property in a redevelopment exes to a housing authority or any public agency for public housing projects. Assembly Bill No. 2860 Introduced by Connell. Placement Service. Requires the public employment offices established by the AYE Director of Employment to provide a placement service for teachers in public school districts. Assembly Constitutional Amendments ACA-60 Introduced by Schrade. Crossfiling at Primary elections. Authorizes a condidate for R party nomination at the direct NO primary election to crossfile in the primary of the other parties. Requires that a candidate obtain his own party nomination as a condition to being nominated to the same office by any other party. - B - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Assembly Bill No. 3118 Introduced by Rees. Provides that employees having diseases or impairments may file medical reports with commission end receive NO permit specifying diseases or impalaments and Authorizing employee to exempt employer by agreement in wiiting from liability for exacorbation or worsening thereof or for injury or death caused by such conditions. Assembly Constitutional Amendments ACA-17 Introduced by Summer. Abolishes the budget session of the Legislature in even-numbered years. Provides that regular sensions of the AYE Logislature shall be held annually, and removes the present limitation of 120 calendar days on the length of the sessions. Reduces the number of days which must clapse before a bill, other than the budget bill, shall be heard by any committee or acted upon by either house from 30 calendar days following the date the bill was first introduced to 15 calendar days foll/owing the date the bill was first introduced. ACA-37 Introduced by Petris. Ratifies nont an act of the Legislature adding Article 7 (commencing with Section 12070) to that portion of the AYE Government Code conferring power on the Governor. The act involved authorizes the Governor to promulgate executive reorganization plans, subject to the power of either house of the Legislature to disapprove such plans. Authorizes the Legislature to amend or repeal said act at any time. -8,A- - MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Senate Bill No. 121 Introduced by Rodda. Registration of voters. States legislative intent that county clerks shall deputize ac registrars volunteers provided by qualified political partics, service organizations, and bona fide labor organizations, and that such volunteers shall be permitted NO to vegister voters in the precincts in which they reside and such other places as the clerk any approve. Provides that registration period shall close so days, rather than 53 days, prior to the eletion for which the registrations are taken. Requires the county clerk to maintain facilities at the county seat and in cities having a populations of 20,000 or more, for 30 days prior to the close of registration..etc. Senate Bill No. 121 Same as above ( Voting on passage:) AYE Senate Bill No. 134 Introduced by Richards. Support of old age posistance recipients. Limits the class of relatives liable for support of old age assistance recipient to the adult children of the recipient. Requires the State Board of Social Welfare, by regulation, to prescribe the criteria, methods of See Note #1 investigation, and test check procedures respecting the AYE determination of meximum amount that any adult child may be held liable to contribute, and specifies designated factors to be considered by the board in connection with the adoption of regulations in this regard. Increases income exemption for specified taxes from 20 percent to 25 percent of gross income, but adds to items to which deduction applies, expenses necessary to produce income and the cost of tools, equipment, uniforms. Deletes allowance for traveling expenses incurred in connection with E trade or business. Revises relatives' contribution to commence at incomes of $ 301 or over; instead of $ 201 or over, and to grant $ 200 rather than - Continued - a : I MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Senate Bill No. 134 a $ 50, exemption for each dependent. Changes income ranges up to $ 1,000, on which scale is based, 80 that ( Continued ) each range covers $ 50 in income rather than $ 25. Declares that the relatives' responsibility provisions in the Old Age Security Law, and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, are the exclusive means for determining the liability of an adult child to contribute to his parents. Eliminates provisions requiring the board of supervisors to determine the ability of responsible relatives to contribute to the support of their parents and to designate the smount to be paid. Also eliminates provision requiring a relative to submit to the county a form relative to his ability to pay, and modifies the requirements applicable to the enforcement of a relative's liability by a county. Grants to an adult child the same right of appeal to the State Social Welfare Board for modification of required contributions, as is granted to an applicant for or recipient of aid for appeals from decisions of the county relating to their eligibility for aid or the amount of their grants. Deletes existing provisions authorizing a responsible relative to appeal to the board, for modification of 2. required contribution, within SO days after receiving notice of his obligation to make such contribution. Senate Bill No. 135 Introduced by Richards, Aid to the Disabled. Eliminates provision imposing liability on the spouse, parent, and adult child of a recipient of aid to the disabled to support the recipient, and authorizing the appropriate legal AYE officer of the county, at the request of the board of supervisors, to maintain an action in the superior court to enforce the liability of such relatives. Provides, See Note #1 instead, that the ability of a parent or adult child to support a recipient of aid to the disabled shall be determined in accordance with the responsible relatives' requirements prescribed in the Old Age Security Law. Also authorizes a county to maintain an action in the superior court to recover such amount as it is determined that the relative is able 10 MEASURE DESCRIPTION HOW VOTED Senate Bill No. 135 to pay and to secure an order requiring payment of any sums which may become due in the future. Permits ( Continued ) a relative to appeal to the State Board of Social Welfare for a modification of a required contribution, and provides that such appeal shall be hendled in the same manner as appeals by applicants for 02 recipients of public assistance. Senate Bill No. 136 Introduced by Richards. Aid to the Blind. ( general provisions pertaining to AYE See Note #1 relatives' responsibility as set forth in SB-134 and SB-125 ) Senate Bill No. 282 Introduced by O'Sullivan (At the request of the Governor ) Requires the State Department of Public Health to maintain AYE a health program for seasonal agricultural workers and their families. Senate Bill No. 414 Introduced by Burns. State aid for housing for elderly persons of low income. Provides for loans of State funds to private individuals AYE and to public end private corporations for the construction, acquisition, and development of low cost and low rent housing for elderly persons of low income. Authorizes issuance of state bonds therefore. Senate Bill No. 923 Introduced by O'Sullivan. Agricultural Labor Commission. Creates an Agricultural Labor Commission to act as a AYE factfinding body to ascertain, study and analyze the problems of labor management relations in California agriculture and prescribes its membership and powers and duties. Appropriates $ 10,000 to the commission to be used in carrying out its purposes. - 11 - The above data, of course, is only part of the voting record of the 11th Assembly District incumbent. We sincerely unge that careful study and thought be given to this information. We particularly urge that you consult various staff personnel for comparative information within your own five, based upon 1950, 1960 and projections for 1962 taxes levied against your operations in the 11th Assembly District. June Zom Miley, Charrman Reduction) Special Research Committee, West Contra/Costa REPUBLICAN ASSEMBLY NOTE #1 - We recommend your requesting the director of the Contra Costa County Department of Social Welfare to provide you with information on how these bills affect your tax base. NOTE #2 - We recommond you ack your company or trade association legislative director for details on how this legislation will affect your business. - 12 - THE FIRST STEP The first step toward definitive action is organization. The author proposed that business and industry join in creating a hard-hitting campaign organization to utilize all existing systems of political action. To successfully elect a friendly successor to the somewhat entrenched Incumbent will require the services of C political specialist to manage a professional campaign. Together with the candidate, the manager would have to coordinate the activities of an executive campaign committee of four principal directors: Finance, Volunteer Political Groups, Neighborhood Campaign Vorkers and Community Support Groups. FINANCE COMMITTEE The Finance Committee Chairman would be responsible for establishing a system of receiving campaign donations, a running audit, and disbursement of funds from a pre-ectablished budget. He would preside over the finance committee, comprising a chairmnn for business and industrial solicitations, and a chairman for precinct campaign fund solicitations. VOLUNTEER POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS The director for volunteer political organizations should be responsible for recruitment of neighborhood campaign workers from among the three Republican Assembly units, seven California Federation of Republican Womens' clubs and three Young Republican organizations now established in the new Eleventh Assembly District. Those volunteer partisan groups would also be requested to provide a platform from which the candidate may make public his views on campaign issues. Manpower for staffing campaign headquarters, typing, door-to-door fund drives, etc., may also be procured from these groups of Republican volunteers. NEIGHBORHOOD CAMPAIGN GROUPS The Neighborhood Groups director would be responsible for maintaining a cross-inder record of the names, addresses, phone numbers, precinct numbers and party registration of all volunteer workers. He would receive his data from two main sources: the director of the Volunteer Political Organizations, and the candidate bimself, who will strive to obtain volunteers on a block-by-block basis during the course of the campaign. The Neighborhood Groups director would be assisted by two chairmen? Clerical committee, which would recruitevolunteers for mass clerical chores; and Neighborhood block workers, who would diatribu campaign literature and graphic materials and meke door-to-door contacts in behalf of the candidate. - I - COMMUNITY SUPPORT GROUPS The Community Support Groups director would coordinate the activities of five chairmen: Service Club Campaign Activities, Professional Group Campaign Activities, Business and Industrial Group Campaign Activities, Labor Group Campaign Activities and Church Group Campaign Activities. Through this directorate, efforte would be made to get the candidate before as many of these groups as possible. Each chairman would be asked to list each organization within his area of responsibility in the Eleventh Assembly District. He would be asked to enlist as = member of his committee a representative from each of those groups so listed. All such representatives would be asked to keep his chairman informed of potential opportunities available to the candidate which might contribute toward a successful campaign. Written reports of all such information would be immediately forwarded to the candidate. oOo Establishment of the above organization must commence within the next few weeks. Some committment of funds for campaign purposes must be made within the next few days if the campaign is to succeed. ### April 24, 1962 Dear Mr. Schols: Dick Nixon has asked me to express his thanks for your thoughtfulness in writing him about the Testimonial Dinner planned for gubernatorial candidate, Newman Marsilius. As in many other instances, firm policy rulings must be made and strictly followed, in fairness to all concerned. X X File: I # In this case, the policy is that there will be no involvement in out-of-state campaigns, which of course precludes sending the requested message to Mr. Marsilius on April 30th. We feel certain you will understand what we believe date S to be the only fair and just method of handling this and many other similar requests. With kind regards. Sincerely, H. R. Haldeman Mr. William Scholz Campaign Manager Citizens Committee for Marsilius P.O. Box 6300 Bridgeport, Connecticut Endorsements file Citizens Committee For Marsilius WARREN J. FAUST, Chairman P.O. BOX 6300 BRIDGEPORT, CONN. FOrest 7-8233 Stratford EMIL G. SCHIPUL, Secretary Trumbull FLOYD J. BLACKMON, Treasurer Fairfield April 17, 1962 SAMUEL BARG Old Greenwich JOHN P. BASSETT Fairfield HOWARD J. BEHN Trumbull MRS. DAVID BJORKLUND Trumbull Mr. Richard Nixon ALFRED V. BODINE Los Angeles, Stratford JOHN E. BUTLER California Bridgeport WILLIAM CARLSON Dear Mr. Nixon: Bridgeport ARTHUR CLIFFORD Bridgeport On Monday, April 30, friends, FRANK A. DIEL neighbors and associates of Newman Marsilius, Trumbull THOMAS F. DOWD, JR. a candidate for the Republican nomination for Trumbull Governor of Connecticut, will tender a ARTHUR D. FRIEDMAN testimonial dinner in his honor. Trumbull ARTHUR E. HART Stratford As you will note from the enclosed WILLIAM C. HART material, Mr. Marsilius has rendered distin- Bridgeport WILLIAM W. HATFIELD guished service to his community, his state Milford and the nation; as a businessman, he has THOMAS V. KASKIE taken an active and important part in the Trumbull WILLIAM C. KEATOR political process. Fairfield CHARLES B. KENTNOR It would add immeasurably to the Fairfield AARON A. LEVINE significance of the occasion if we could read Trumbull a message from you commending his civic and A. GEORGE LINDQUIST political contributions and wishing him well Easton RONALD A. MALONY in his candidecy. May we count on you for Fairfield this favor? KENNETH A. MALONEY Fairfield HAMILTON MERRILL Sincerely, Fairfield LLOYD H. MEYER Nichols ELNATHAN MITCHELL william William Scholz, scholy Fairfield RAYMOND MOORE Campaign Manager Trumbull NORMAN K. PARSELLS Fairfield WS:pn J. BALDWIN PEARSON Enclosure Fairfield ALVIN W. PECK Easton LOUIS RAYMOND Foirfield RICHARD L. REVENAUGH Fairfield DONALD SAMMIS Stratford FRED B. SILLIMAN Foirfield EARLE W. SMITH Bridgeport DEVER C. WARNER Fairfield 26 April 24, 1962 Dear Mr. Zeigler: Dick Nixon has asked me to express his thanks for your thoughtfulness in writing him about the Christensen campaign. Unfortunately, your letter did not reach us in time for us to get this explanation X X File: 1 back to you before the breakfast meeting planned today at the Olympic Hotel. However, the policy we have had to establish would have prevented date Z the requested wire being sent, since there can be no involvement in out-of-state campaigns. We feel certain you will under- stand what we believe to be the only fair and just method of handling this and many other similar requests. With kind regards and good wishes. of Sincerely, H. R. Haldeman Mr. Jack Zeigler State Campaign Chairman Richard G. Christensen Headquarters 308 Orpheum Building Seattle 1, Washington Endorsements fill INTER-OFFICE MEMORANDUM Nixon for Governor To: H. R. Haldeman Date: April 20, 1962 From: Loie Gaunt Lgg Subject: attached message request from State of Washington Distribution: If Christensen has any primary competition, am sure wire should not be sent. Source and time to check that part out, I do not have. If you determine that wire should be sent and will have Dorothy let me know, I could send one along lines of: Greatly pleased with reports of the vigor and enthusiasm of your campaign for the U.S. Senate, I know you will keep up KYE the good work. Best wishes for success, Regards, Dick Nixon -- or whatever you suggest. However, if no wire to go, would like to leave in your hands to either ignore or TD over your signature. Jack Zeigler has been active in RN campaigns in the past; how much and how effectively, I do not know. YOUNG AMERICANS FOR RICHARD G. CHRISTENSEN HEADQUARTERS - P.O. BOX 181 EDMONDS, WASHINGTON STATE CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE 308 Orpheum Building FOR U.S. SENATE Seattle 1, Washington April 17, 1962 Mr. Richard M. Nixon c/o Adams, Duke & Hazeltine 522 West 6th Street Los Angeles, California Dear Mr. Nixon: The Christensen Campaign is gathering real momentum! A spectacular event, a well-attended breakfast meeting, to meet and hear "Dick", will be held on Tuesday, April 24th. at 7:30 A. M. in the Georgian Room of the Olympic Hotel, Seattle, Washington. One thousand invitations have been issued to concerned individuals in this area. Dick is campaigning vigorously and is gathering strength everywhere in his fight to unseat Warren G. Magnuson, U. S. Senator of Washington State, Democrat. A wire of encouragement from a person of your political stature would be most welcome. This will be greatly appre- ciated by Dick and the rest of us, devoted to working for him to win. Sincerely yours, Jack Zeigler STATE CAMPAION CHAIRMAN JZ/ez Lat on "A New Concept In Politics" RICHARD G. CHRISTENSEN Republican Candidate for the Nomination to the U.S. Senate

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This file contains: Voting Record of Incumbent Assemblyman from West Contra Costa, California. 12pp. [Report], n.d. "The First Step" - Proposal for creation of campaign organization around incumbent assemblyman of West Contra Costa, California. 2pp. [Report], n.d. H.R. Haldeman to William Scholz. Re: Impossiblity of endorsing Newman Marsilius per endorsement policy. 3pp. w/attachments. (1pg. Not scanned) [Letter], 4/24/1962 H.R. Haldeman to Jack Zeigler. Re: Impossibility of endorsing Richard G. Christensen per endorsement policy. 4pp. w/ attachments. [Letter], 4/24/1962

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    "description": "This file contains:\n\nVoting Record of Incumbent Assemblyman from West Contra Costa, California.  12pp. [Report], n.d.\n\n\"The First Step\" - Proposal for creation of campaign organization around incumbent assemblyman of West Contra Costa, California.  2pp. [Report], n.d.\n\nH.R. Haldeman to William Scholz.  Re: Impossiblity of endorsing Newman Marsilius per endorsement policy.  3pp. w/attachments.  (1pg. Not scanned) [Letter], 4/24/1962\n\nH.R. Haldeman to Jack Zeigler.  Re: Impossibility of endorsing Richard G. Christensen per endorsement policy.  4pp. w/ attachments. [Letter], 4/24/1962",
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    "ocrText": "Richard Nixon Presidential Library\nWhite House Special Files Collection\nFolder List\nBox Number\nFolder Number\nDocument Date\nDocument Type\nDocument Description\n62\n28\nn.d.\nReport\nVoting Record of Incumbent Assemblyman\nfrom West Contra Costa, California. 12pp.\n62\n28\nn.d.\nReport\n\"The First Step\" - Proposal for creation of\ncampaign organization around incumbent\nassemblyman of West Contra Costa,\nCalifornia. 2pp.\n62\n28\n04/24/1962\nLetter\nH.R. Haldeman to William Scholz. Re:\nImpossiblity of endorsing Newman Marsilius\nper endorsement policy. 3pp.\nw/attachments. (1pg. Not scanned)\n62\n28\n04/24/1962\nLetter\nH.R. Haldeman to Jack Zeigler. Re:\nImpossibility of endorsing Richard G.\nChristensen per endorsement policy. 4pp. w/\nattachments.\nThursday, September 06, 2007\nPage 1 of 1\nAS A PUBLIC SERVICE TO INDUSTRY IN THE 11TH ASSEMBLY DISTRICT OF\nCONTRA COSTA COUNTY, THE WEST CONTRA COSTA REPUBLICAN ASSEMBLY PROVIDES THE ATTACHED\nINFORMATION PERTAINING TO THE VOTING RECORD OF THE INCUMBENT ASSEMBLYMAN FROM THIS\nDISTRICT IN THE STATE LEGISLATURE. THIS INFORMATION, COMPILED FROM THE OFFICIAL\nRECORDS OF THE CALIFORNIA STATE LEGISLATURE. PORTIONS WERE RECENTLY PUBLISHED BY THE\nCALIFORNIA STATE LABOR COUNCIL, AFL-CIO. THE INCUMBENT ASSEMBLYMAN IS JOHN KNOX. RE\nIS A DEMOCRAT.\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 5\nIntroduced by Burton. Eligibility for old age assistance.\nSee Note #1\nEliminates citizenship requirements for old age assistance.\nAYE\nAssembly Bill No. 69\nIntroduced by Burton. Discrimination by persons holding State\nissued licenses. Requires the suspension or revocation of any\nAYE\nlicense issued by the State authorizing the conduct of any\nprofession, vocation or calling, upon the showing the licensee\nhas engaged in a persistent course of conduct of discrimination\nagainst persons requesting performance of services, based solely\nupon race, creed, color or national origin.\nAssembly Bill No. 234\nIntroduced by Crown. Unemployment disability compensation\nfinancing. Requires the Director to requisition the 1944 and 1945\nAYE\nSee Note #2\nworker contributions in the Unemployment Trust Fund for deposit\nin the Disability Fund: and provides. in respect to making up\nannual deficits in extended liability account in Disability Fund,\nfor removal of upper limits on assessments of voluntary plan\ncarriero for such purposes and upper limits ou amounts otherwise\nto be credited; and specifics that interest augmentations shall\nbe deposited rather than credited to the account.\n- 1 -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 329\nIntroduced by Waldie. Increases minimum weekly temporary\ndisability indemnity payment from $20 to $25, and maximum\nAYE\nweekly amount of such payment from $65 to $150. Increases\nminimum weekly permanent disability indemnity payment from\n$20. to $25, and maximum weekly amount of such payment\nfrom $52.50 to $150. Increases from $52.50 to $150 the\nweakly permanent disability indemnity payment for a minor\nwhose probable earnings cannot be reasonably determined.\nRepeals provisions on average annual earnings.\nAssembly Bill No. 370\nIntroduced by Crown. Deletes provision providing that a\nprospective voter may be challenged at the voting\nAYE\nprecinct on the ground that he cannot read as required\nby the Constitution, and it does not appear by statement\nin the affidavit of registration that he is entitled to\nvote notwithstanding such inability.\nAssembly Bill No. 425 Introduced by Burton.\n( See Page 3 )\nAYE\nON PASSAGE.\nAssembly Bill No. 502\nIntroduced by Waldie. Prohibits consideration of pregnancy\nin determining ability to work and availability for work prior\nAYE\nto expiration of eighth month, upon certification by physician\nof ability to perform suitable work, and absence of undue /\nrestrictions on acceptable work. Prohibits consideration, in\ndeterminations RE: work ability and availability of women prior\nto expiration of eighth month of pregnancy, of refusal of employers\nto employ pregnant women.\n- 1,A -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 238\nIntroduced by Crown. Benefit Overpayment. Eliminates from\nprovisions barring department's recovery of overpayments\nAYE\nSee Note #2\nreceived without fault of recipient, language which makes\nbar operative only if recovery would be against equity and\ngood conscience.\nAssembly Bill No. 278\nIntroduced by Waldi. Workmen's Compensation. Provides\nrehabilitation benefits to one suffering a permanent industrial\nAYE\ninjury,\nAssembly Bill No. 326\nIntroduced by Waldie. Burial expenses. Increases maximum\nexpenses from $ 600 to $ 750.\nAYE\nAssembly Bill No. 337\nIntroduced by Elliott. Dismissal of Certificated employees of\nschool districts. Requires that probationary employees of any\nAYE\nschool district, rather than districts having an average daily\nattendance of 85,000 or more, be dismissed for cause only.\nSpecifies that the hearing provided by the existing law for a\ndismissed employee is a hearing to determine the cause of his\ndismissal. Requires that no employee be denied the right to\nsuch hearing.\nAssembly Bill No. 338\nIntroduced by Unrub. 01d Age Assistance. Eliminates relatives'\nresponsibility requirements in Old Age Security Law.\nAYE\nSee Note #1\n- 2 -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\n+\nAssembly Bill No. 402\nIntroduced by Ricks. \"Hot cargo\" and secondary boycotts.\nDeletes ( from the State Labor Code ) provisions relating\nAYE\nto \"hot cargo\" and \"cecondary boycotts.\"\nAssembly Bill No. 404\nIntroduced by Hicks. Employee Wage Statements. Requires\nseparate itemisation of all payments made to bealth or\nAYE\nwelfare, pension, vacation or other fringe benefit programs,\nwhether made directly with respect to hours employed or the\nresult of deduction from wages paid, rather than show all\ndeductions as one aggregate item.\nAssembly Bill No. 405\nIntroduced by llicks. Employee wage statements.\nRequires that statement identify employer and employee,\nAYE\nand specify period of payment, rate, number of hours and\nSea Note #2\nall Geductions, separately stated, upon detachment part of\ncheck, rather then show only deductions, with those authorized\nby employee shown in one aggregate item.\nAssembly Bill No. 425\nIntroduced by Burton. Labor disputes.\nProhibits granting of a restraining order or injunction by\nany judge or court in my case between an employer and\nemployees, or between employers and employees, or between\nABSENT\nemployees, OT between persons employed and persons seeking\nemployment, or their representatives, involving or growing\nout of a dispute concerning terms or conditions of employment,\nunless necessary to prevent irreparable injury to property or\nSee Note #2\na property right of the party making the application, for which\nthere is no adequate remedy at Law. Forbids any restraining\nor injunction granted under the above provisions from prohibiting\ncertain listed activities, and specifies that none of the listed\nactivities shall be considered or held to be a violation of any\nlaw of this State. Repeals provisions relating to jurisdictional\nstrikes, and provisions relating to \"hot cargo\" and \"secondary boycotts.\"\n- S ADDR\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 684\nIntroduced by Rumford. Minimum wages.\nProvides for minimum wage of $ 1.25 for any man, woman\nAYE\nor child.\nAssembly Dill No. 684\nSame 28 above. ON PASSAGE.\nAYE\nAssembly Bill No. 728\nIntroduced by Burton. Aid to needy dicabled.\nEliminates relatives' responsibility requirements imposed\nAYC\nwith respect to aid to the needy disabled law. States that\nthe elimination of such requirements shall not be deemed to\nSee Note #2\neliminate the moral responsibility of a child to support\nhis parents.\nAssembly Bill No. 730\nIntroduced by Burton. Aid to the blind.\nEliminates relatives' responsibility requirements imposed\nAYE\nwith respect to the aid to the potentially celf-supporting\nblind law. States that the elimination of such requirements\nSee Note #2\nshall not be deemed to relieve a child of his moral\nresponsibility to support his parent.\nAssembly Bill No. 801\nIntroduced by Hawkins. Discrimination in housing.\nExtends present law prohibiting discrimination because of\nrace, color, religion, national origin or encestry in the\nAYE\nselling, renting 01 leasing of publically assisted housing\naccomodations to all housing accomodations except a\nsingle-unit dwelling occupied in whole or in part by the\nowner CO his residence. Extends prohibition against\ndiscrimination to financial institutions and real estate brokers\nand salesmen. Declares it unlawful for any person to aid,\nencourage, or compell the commission of any discriminatory acts\nprohibited by the act or the present law, or to attempt to do BO.\nAuthorizes the State Fair Employment Practice Commission to\nprevent violations of the act, and establishes a procedure for its\nContinued\n- 4 -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 637\nIntroduced by Rees. Includes members of a marshal's office\nwithin provisions relating to presumption that certain injuries\nAYE\narose in the course of employment for purposes of workmen's\ncompensation.\nAssembly Bill No. 698\nIntroduced by Caffney. Requires contractors in the Building &\nConstruction Industry to post cash 02 securities with a bank,\nAYE\ntrust company or a bond with the Labor Commissioner for the payment\nof wages and fringe benefits. Prevides failure to comply is\nmisdemeanor and causes automatic revocation of licenses until\nunsecured obligations are satisfied and lawfully complied with.\nAssembly Bill No. 800\nIntroduced by Unruh. Makes apprepriation for support of state\ngovernment for 1961-62 fiscal year. To take effect immediately,\nNO\nurgency measure. (Vote was on Busternd ammendment to delete\nproposed new position and salary of associate consumer counsel\nfrom budget).\nAssembly Dill No. 800\nON PASSAGE OF BUDGET WITHOUT DUSTERUD AMMENDMENT.\nAYE\n(Same as above.)\nAssembly Bill No. 1093\nIntroduced by Unruh. Provides that an individual with seniority\nwho is on lay-off and recalled less than 14 days prior to any\nAYE\nleaving because of a trade dispute is not disqualified for such\nleaving.\n4,A -\n---\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 801\ninvestigation and action on complaints of alleged violations.\nAuthorizes the commission, following the filing of a\n@Continued)\ncomlains, to file with the county recorder a notice that\nIt has taken jurisdiction of the complaint relating to the\nrearing or onle of certain property within the county.\nProvides that this chell be notice to Rll persons of the\nalleged violation, Declares it to be a middemeanor to\ninterfer with the comission in its performance of duties,\nor to violate an order of the commission.\nAssembly Dill No. 1021\nIntroduced by Illioti. Employment agencies:\napplication by, end placement of, minoro. Deletes provision\nprohibiting employment agencies from accepting conlication\nAYE\nfor employment of a minor for employment in violation of\nchild labor laws. Prohibits employment agency from accepting\napplication or making placement of minor under 16 years.\nProhibito collection of placement fee from minor between 16 and\n18 years. Prohibito employment agency from placing or attempting\nto place a minor in employment in violation of provisions of the\nEducation Code relating to their employment.\nAccembly Bill No. 1034\nIntroduced by Meyers. State Civil Service Re-employment priority.\nChanges the sequence of the certification of names from state\nAYE\ncivil service eligible lists by placing the general re-employment\nlist ahead of the promotional lists.\nAccembly Dill Ko. 1045\nIntroduced by Geo. E. Drown. Labor camps and employee housing.\nAdds employee housing to definition of \"camp\". Provides that\nSee Note #1\narea set acide and provided by employer for camping or housing\nAYE\nwhich is occupied or designed for occupancy by S or more\n- Continued\n- 5 -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 1095\nIntroduced by Unruh. Revises provision fixing disqualification\nfor misconduct discharge or voluntary leaving without good cause\nAYE\nat the week in which individual first registered for work and the\nfour weeks which immediately follow, to fix it at the week in\nwhich he first registers for work and for not more than the four\nweeks immediately following.\nAssembly Bill No. 1098 Introduced by Unruh. Nalces it a misdemeanor, the employers failure\nto comply with requirements concerning the posting of employees'\nAYE\nbenefit rights and other prescribed information, or failure to\nsupply new employees with printed information statements and\nmaterials relating to benefit claims.\nAssembly Bill No. 1220 Introduced by Rumford. Changes the maximum tax rate of the district\nfrom one cent to two cents on each $100 of assessed valuation of\nNO\nall the property /in the district. To take effect immediately,\nUrgency Measure.\nAssembly Bill No. 1848 Introduced by Hanna. Excludes from injuries and deaths covered by\nworkmen's compensation injuries caused by attempted suicide and\nNO\ndeaths caused by suicide.\nAssembly Bill No. 1349 Introduced by Hanna. Exempto from injuries covered under the\nWorkmen's Compensation Law an injury sustained in an altercation\nNO\nin which the injured employee was the physical aggressor.\n- S,A . -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 1045\nemployees is \"camp\", rather than area set aside and\nprovided for camping for 5 or more employees. Provides\n(Continued)\nthat prescribed health standards apply to all occupants\nof a camp or employee housing. Requires registration\nof existing end proposed camps and employee housing with\nSee Note #1\nDivision of Housing, and prescribes information to be\nfurnished at time of registration.\nAssembly Bill No. 1213\nIntroduced by Hawkins. Liens for County Hospital care.\nProvides that the cost of county hospitalization shall not\nAYE\nconstitute. a lien against the real property of a\nrecipient of Old Age assistance.\nAssembly Bill No. 1372\nIntroduced by Elliott. Declares it to be the public\npolicy of the State that to cope with problem of\nrehabilitation or redevelopment of clum or blighted areas\ndesignated factors which are smong the principal couses of\nsuch areas are to be taken into consideration and that such\nABSENT\nprograms are to be undertaken and operated in such manner\n28 not just to exchange new alums for old slums or to congest\nindividuals from one clum to another clum. Requires redevelopment\nagency to provide rental units for persons displaced by community\nredevelopment or urban renewal projects. Prohibits agency from\nusing the right of eminent domain for this purpose or operating\na rental establishment. Authorizes redevelopment agency to\nbuild and sell homes at cost to homeowners displaced by\nprojects. Provides that there shall be no discrimination in\nthe undertaking or operation of provisions regarding housing\nfor persons displaced by projects because of race, color,\nreligion, national origin, or ancestry.\n6\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 1382\nIntroduced by Munnell. Eliminates from definition of unemployed\nindividual for benefit purposes, provision that remuneration\nAYE\nfor any person service whether performed as employee or independent\ncontractor shall be considered wage receipts.\nAssembly Bill No. 1502\nIntroduced by Burton. Adds provision requiring certain specified\ninformation be furnished employees on check stub, draft or\nAYE\nin\nvoucher or in separate statement.\nAssembly Bill No. 1554\nIntroduced by O'Connell. Provides that elective officers whose\nterm of service is fixed by the Constitution, rather than public\nAYE\nofficers and employees generally, shall take the oath prescribed\nby Art. XX, Sec. 3 Cal. Const. Prescribes form of oath or\naffirmation to be taken by other public officers and by public\nemployees, which is the same as the oath or affirmation required\nof military and naval officers of the United States.\nAssembly Bill No. 1593\nIntroduced by Winton. Creates in the state government the following\nagencies: Health & Welfare Agency, consisting of the departments of\nAYE\nSocial Welfare, Mental Hygiene, and Public Health; Youth & Adult\nCorrections Agency, consisting of the departments of Corrections &\nYouth Authority; and the Agriculture and Resources Agency, consisting\nof the Departments of Agriculture, Conservation, Fish & Game, Parks &\nRecreation, and Water Resources. Places each agency under supervision\nof an administrator appointed by the Governor. Gives administrator\npower of general supervision over each department or unit within the\nagency. Requires the administrator to develop and report to the\nGovernor on the legislative, budgetary, and administrative programs\nfor his agency. Abolishes Dept. of Natural Resources. Creates\nDept. of Parks & Recreation to succeed to functions of Dept. of Natural\nResources exercised through its divisions of Beaches & Parks, Small Craft\nHarbors, and Recreation. Creates Dept. of Conservation to succeed to\nfunctions of Dept. of Natural Resources exercized through its divisions\nof Forestry, Mines, Oil & Gas, and Soil Conservation.\n(Continued)\n- 6,A -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 1593\nPlaces State Water Rights Board, State Water Pollution Control\nBoard, and each regional water pollution control board in the\n(Continued)\nDept. of Water Resources. Places Colorado River Board of\nCalifornia in the Dept. of Water Resources. Effective June 30,\n1962, abolishes the board and office of Colorado River\nCommissioner and transfers all of their functions to the\nDept. of Water Resources. Abolishes Poultry Improvement\nCommission and transfers functions to Dept. of Agriculture.\nRevises membership of Board of Corrections. To become operative\nOctober 1, 1961.\nAssembly Bill No. 1723\nIntroduced by Petris. Authorizes the Governor to propose reorganization\nplans affecting state-wide executive agencies at any session of the\nAYE\nLegislature within a prescribed period after commoncement of the\nsession. Such plans may supersede statutory provisions, but may not\naffect functions vested in state agencies by the Constitution. Any\nsuch plan is subject to referendum procedures and takes effect on\nthe 91st day following adjournment of the legislative session to which\npresented, unless a majority of the elected members of both houses adopt\na resolution disapproving the plan. Becomes operative upon the adoption\nby the voters of a ratifying constitutional amendment.\nAssembly Bill No. 2171\nIntroduced by Hawkins. Provides that apprenticeship Council and\nDivision of Apprenticeship Standards may foster and promote on-the-\nAYE\njob training programs others than apprenticeship.\nAssembly Bill No. 2836\nIntroduced by Garrius. Requires all publicly held companies, other\nthan those specifically exempted, to send annual and quarterly reports\nAYE\nto their shareholders and to the commissioner of corporations. Requires\ncertain of the reports to be audited. Requires such companies to hold\nannual shareholder meetings and to send out proxies for such meetings.\nDefines such companies as companies with 100 or more shareholders. Makes\nit a misdemeanor to violate these provisions and gives the commissioner\nthe injunctive power to enforce these provisions.\n- 6,B -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 1882\nIntroduced by Munnell. Unemployed individual.\nEliminates from definition of unemployed individual for\nAYE\nbenefit purposes, provision that remmeration for any\npersonal services whether performed as employee or\nindependent contractor shall be considered wage receipts.\nAssembly Bill No. 1663\nIntroduced by Hawkins, Agricultural employment.\nEliminates provisions exempting from unemployment incurance\nAYE\nlaws employment in agriculture.\nAssembly BILL No. 1860\nwilliam\nreal property. Declares void every provision in = written\ninstrument relating to real property which provision restricts\nAYE\nthe conveyance, encumberances, leaning or mortgaging thereof\nto any person of a specific race, color, religion, ancestory,\nor national origin and every restriction as to the use or\noccupation of real property because of the user's or occupier's\nrace, color, religion, ancestry, or national origin. Declares\nvoid every restriction upon the transfer of title to real\nproperty which restriction directly or indirectly limits the\nacquisition, use or occupation of such property because of the\nacquirer's, user's or occupier's race, color, religion,\nancestry or national origin. Requires every policy of title\ninsurance issued after effective date of section to set forth\nprovisions of Sec. 53, Civ. C., provided as above.\nAssembly Bill No. 1976\nIntroduced by Unxuh. ( At the request of the Governor )\nEmployment of older workers.\nProhibits an employer from discriminating against employees and\nprospective employees on the basis of age. Requires the Department\nABSENT\nof Employment to cooperate with public and private agencies in\nproviding jobs, counselling and placement services for older\nworkers and in developing employment programs for older workers.\n- Continued -\n- 7 -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 1976\nRequires the Department to carry on a continuing program\nconcerning the problems of older workers in beeking,\n( Continued )\nobtaining, and holding employment, and authorizes the\ndepartment to create local advisory agencies to study such\nproblems, to foster cooperation among various groups within\nthe State and to make recommendations relating to the employment\nof older workers and the elimination of discrimination on the\nbasis of age.\nAssembly Bill No. 2394\nIntroduced by Burton. Community Redevelopment.\nDeletes prohibition against transfer by a community\nAYE\nredevelopment agency of public properties to a housing\nauthority or public agency for low-rent public housing\nprojects. Allows a community redevelopment agency to sell,\nlease or donate real property in a redevelopment exes to a\nhousing authority or any public agency for public housing projects.\nAssembly Bill No. 2860\nIntroduced by Connell. Placement Service.\nRequires the public employment offices established by the\nAYE\nDirector of Employment to provide a placement service for\nteachers in public school districts.\nAssembly Constitutional Amendments\nACA-60\nIntroduced by Schrade. Crossfiling at Primary elections.\nAuthorizes a condidate for R party nomination at the direct\nNO\nprimary election to crossfile in the primary of the other\nparties. Requires that a candidate obtain his own party\nnomination as a condition to being nominated to the same\noffice by any other party.\n- B -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nAssembly Bill No. 3118\nIntroduced by Rees. Provides that employees having diseases or\nimpairments may file medical reports with commission end receive\nNO\npermit specifying diseases or impalaments and Authorizing\nemployee to exempt employer by agreement in wiiting from liability\nfor exacorbation or worsening thereof or for injury or death\ncaused by such conditions.\nAssembly Constitutional Amendments\nACA-17\nIntroduced by Summer. Abolishes the budget session of the Legislature\nin even-numbered years. Provides that regular sensions of the\nAYE\nLogislature shall be held annually, and removes the present limitation\nof 120 calendar days on the length of the sessions. Reduces the\nnumber of days which must clapse before a bill, other than the budget\nbill, shall be heard by any committee or acted upon by either house from\n30 calendar days following the date the bill was first introduced to 15\ncalendar days foll/owing the date the bill was first introduced.\nACA-37\nIntroduced by Petris. Ratifies nont an act of the Legislature adding\nArticle 7 (commencing with Section 12070) to that portion of the\nAYE\nGovernment Code conferring power on the Governor. The act involved\nauthorizes the Governor to promulgate executive reorganization plans,\nsubject to the power of either house of the Legislature to disapprove\nsuch plans. Authorizes the Legislature to amend or repeal said act at\nany time.\n-8,A- -\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nSenate Bill No. 121\nIntroduced by Rodda. Registration of voters.\nStates legislative intent that county clerks shall deputize\nac registrars volunteers provided by qualified political\npartics, service organizations, and bona fide labor\norganizations, and that such volunteers shall be permitted\nNO\nto vegister voters in the precincts in which they reside\nand such other places as the clerk any approve. Provides that\nregistration period shall close so days, rather than 53 days,\nprior to the eletion for which the registrations are taken.\nRequires the county clerk to maintain facilities at the county\nseat and in cities having a populations of 20,000 or more, for\n30 days prior to the close of registration..etc.\nSenate Bill No. 121\nSame as above ( Voting on passage:)\nAYE\nSenate Bill No. 134\nIntroduced by Richards. Support of old age posistance\nrecipients. Limits the class of relatives liable for\nsupport of old age assistance recipient to the adult children\nof the recipient. Requires the State Board of Social Welfare,\nby regulation, to prescribe the criteria, methods of\nSee Note #1\ninvestigation, and test check procedures respecting the\nAYE\ndetermination of meximum amount that any adult child may be\nheld liable to contribute, and specifies designated factors\nto be considered by the board in connection with the\nadoption of regulations in this regard. Increases income\nexemption for specified taxes from 20 percent to 25 percent of\ngross income, but adds to items to which deduction applies,\nexpenses necessary to produce income and the cost of tools,\nequipment, uniforms. Deletes allowance for traveling expenses\nincurred in connection with E trade or business. Revises\nrelatives' contribution to commence at incomes of $ 301 or\nover; instead of $ 201 or over, and to grant $ 200 rather than\n- Continued -\na : I\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nSenate Bill No. 134\na $ 50, exemption for each dependent. Changes income\nranges up to $ 1,000, on which scale is based, 80 that\n( Continued )\neach range covers $ 50 in income rather than $ 25. Declares\nthat the relatives' responsibility provisions in the Old Age\nSecurity Law, and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, are\nthe exclusive means for determining the liability of an\nadult child to contribute to his parents. Eliminates provisions\nrequiring the board of supervisors to determine the ability of\nresponsible relatives to contribute to the support of their\nparents and to designate the smount to be paid. Also eliminates\nprovision requiring a relative to submit to the county a form\nrelative to his ability to pay, and modifies the requirements\napplicable to the enforcement of a relative's liability by\na county. Grants to an adult child the same right of appeal\nto the State Social Welfare Board for modification of required\ncontributions, as is granted to an applicant for or recipient\nof aid for appeals from decisions of the county relating to\ntheir eligibility for aid or the amount of their grants.\nDeletes existing provisions authorizing a responsible relative\nto appeal to the board, for modification of 2. required\ncontribution, within SO days after receiving notice of his\nobligation to make such contribution.\nSenate Bill No. 135\nIntroduced by Richards, Aid to the Disabled.\nEliminates provision imposing liability on the spouse, parent,\nand adult child of a recipient of aid to the disabled to\nsupport the recipient, and authorizing the appropriate legal\nAYE\nofficer of the county, at the request of the board of\nsupervisors, to maintain an action in the superior court\nto enforce the liability of such relatives. Provides,\nSee Note #1\ninstead, that the ability of a parent or adult child to\nsupport a recipient of aid to the disabled shall be determined\nin accordance with the responsible relatives' requirements\nprescribed in the Old Age Security Law. Also authorizes a\ncounty to maintain an action in the superior court to recover\nsuch amount as it is determined that the relative is able\n10\nMEASURE\nDESCRIPTION\nHOW VOTED\nSenate Bill No. 135\nto pay and to secure an order requiring payment of\nany sums which may become due in the future. Permits\n( Continued )\na relative to appeal to the State Board of Social Welfare\nfor a modification of a required contribution, and\nprovides that such appeal shall be hendled in the same\nmanner as appeals by applicants for 02 recipients of\npublic assistance.\nSenate Bill No. 136\nIntroduced by Richards. Aid to the Blind.\n( general provisions pertaining to\nAYE\nSee Note #1\nrelatives' responsibility as set forth\nin SB-134 and SB-125 )\nSenate Bill No. 282\nIntroduced by O'Sullivan (At the request of the Governor )\nRequires the State Department of Public Health to maintain\nAYE\na health program for seasonal agricultural workers and\ntheir families.\nSenate Bill No. 414\nIntroduced by Burns. State aid for housing for elderly\npersons of low income.\nProvides for loans of State funds to private individuals\nAYE\nand to public end private corporations for the construction,\nacquisition, and development of low cost and low rent\nhousing for elderly persons of low income. Authorizes\nissuance of state bonds therefore.\nSenate Bill No. 923\nIntroduced by O'Sullivan. Agricultural Labor Commission.\nCreates an Agricultural Labor Commission to act as a\nAYE\nfactfinding body to ascertain, study and analyze the\nproblems of labor management relations in California\nagriculture and prescribes its membership and powers and duties.\nAppropriates $ 10,000 to the commission to be used in\ncarrying out its purposes.\n- 11 -\nThe above data, of course, is only part of the voting record of the\n11th Assembly District incumbent. We sincerely unge that careful study and thought be given\nto this information. We particularly urge that you consult various staff personnel for comparative\ninformation within your own five, based upon 1950, 1960 and projections for 1962 taxes levied against\nyour operations in the 11th Assembly District.\nJune Zom Miley, Charrman\nReduction)\nSpecial Research Committee,\nWest Contra/Costa\nREPUBLICAN ASSEMBLY\nNOTE #1 - We recommend your requesting the director of the Contra Costa County Department of Social\nWelfare to provide you with information on how these bills affect your tax base.\nNOTE #2 - We recommond you ack your company or trade association legislative director for details\non how this legislation will affect your business.\n- 12 -\nTHE FIRST STEP\nThe first step toward definitive action is organization.\nThe author proposed that business and industry join in\ncreating a hard-hitting campaign organization to utilize all existing\nsystems of political action.\nTo successfully elect a friendly successor to the somewhat\nentrenched Incumbent will require the services of C political\nspecialist to manage a professional campaign. Together with the\ncandidate, the manager would have to coordinate the activities of\nan executive campaign committee of four principal directors: Finance,\nVolunteer Political Groups, Neighborhood Campaign Vorkers and\nCommunity Support Groups.\nFINANCE COMMITTEE\nThe Finance Committee Chairman would be responsible for\nestablishing a system of receiving campaign donations, a running audit,\nand disbursement of funds from a pre-ectablished budget. He would\npreside over the finance committee, comprising a chairmnn for business\nand industrial solicitations, and a chairman for precinct campaign\nfund solicitations.\nVOLUNTEER POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS\nThe director for volunteer political organizations should be\nresponsible for recruitment of neighborhood campaign workers from among\nthe three Republican Assembly units, seven California Federation of\nRepublican Womens' clubs and three Young Republican organizations now\nestablished in the new Eleventh Assembly District. Those volunteer\npartisan groups would also be requested to provide a platform from\nwhich the candidate may make public his views on campaign issues.\nManpower for staffing campaign headquarters, typing, door-to-door\nfund drives, etc., may also be procured from these groups of Republican\nvolunteers.\nNEIGHBORHOOD CAMPAIGN GROUPS\nThe Neighborhood Groups director would be responsible for\nmaintaining a cross-inder record of the names, addresses, phone numbers,\nprecinct numbers and party registration of all volunteer workers. He\nwould receive his data from two main sources: the director of the\nVolunteer Political Organizations, and the candidate bimself, who will\nstrive to obtain volunteers on a block-by-block basis during the course\nof the campaign. The Neighborhood Groups director would be assisted by\ntwo chairmen? Clerical committee, which would recruitevolunteers for\nmass clerical chores; and Neighborhood block workers, who would diatribu\ncampaign literature and graphic materials and meke door-to-door contacts\nin behalf of the candidate.\n- I -\nCOMMUNITY SUPPORT GROUPS\nThe Community Support Groups director would coordinate the\nactivities of five chairmen: Service Club Campaign Activities,\nProfessional Group Campaign Activities, Business and Industrial Group\nCampaign Activities, Labor Group Campaign Activities and Church Group\nCampaign Activities. Through this directorate, efforte would be made\nto get the candidate before as many of these groups as possible. Each\nchairman would be asked to list each organization within his area of\nresponsibility in the Eleventh Assembly District. He would be asked to\nenlist as = member of his committee a representative from each of those\ngroups so listed. All such representatives would be asked to keep his\nchairman informed of potential opportunities available to the candidate\nwhich might contribute toward a successful campaign. Written reports\nof all such information would be immediately forwarded to the candidate.\noOo\nEstablishment of the above organization must commence within\nthe next few weeks.\nSome committment of funds for campaign purposes must be made\nwithin the next few days if the campaign is to succeed.\n###\nApril 24, 1962\nDear Mr. Schols:\nDick Nixon has asked me to express his thanks\nfor your thoughtfulness in writing him about the Testimonial Dinner\nplanned for gubernatorial candidate, Newman Marsilius.\nAs in many other instances, firm policy rulings\nmust be made and strictly followed, in fairness to all concerned.\nX X File:\nI\n#\nIn this case, the policy is that there will be no involvement in\nout-of-state campaigns, which of course precludes sending the\nrequested message to Mr. Marsilius on April 30th.\nWe feel certain you will understand what we believe\ndate\nS\nto be the only fair and just method of handling this and many other\nsimilar requests.\nWith kind regards.\nSincerely,\nH. R. Haldeman\nMr. William Scholz\nCampaign Manager\nCitizens Committee for Marsilius\nP.O. Box 6300\nBridgeport, Connecticut\nEndorsements file\nCitizens Committee For Marsilius\nWARREN J. FAUST, Chairman\nP.O. BOX 6300\nBRIDGEPORT, CONN.\nFOrest 7-8233\nStratford\nEMIL G. SCHIPUL, Secretary\nTrumbull\nFLOYD J. BLACKMON, Treasurer\nFairfield\nApril 17, 1962\nSAMUEL BARG\nOld Greenwich\nJOHN P. BASSETT\nFairfield\nHOWARD J. BEHN\nTrumbull\nMRS. DAVID BJORKLUND\nTrumbull\nMr. Richard Nixon\nALFRED V. BODINE\nLos Angeles,\nStratford\nJOHN E. BUTLER\nCalifornia\nBridgeport\nWILLIAM CARLSON\nDear Mr. Nixon:\nBridgeport\nARTHUR CLIFFORD\nBridgeport\nOn Monday, April 30, friends,\nFRANK A. DIEL\nneighbors and associates of Newman Marsilius,\nTrumbull\nTHOMAS F. DOWD, JR.\na candidate for the Republican nomination for\nTrumbull\nGovernor of Connecticut, will tender a\nARTHUR D. FRIEDMAN\ntestimonial dinner in his honor.\nTrumbull\nARTHUR E. HART\nStratford\nAs you will note from the enclosed\nWILLIAM C. HART\nmaterial, Mr. Marsilius has rendered distin-\nBridgeport\nWILLIAM W. HATFIELD\nguished service to his community, his state\nMilford\nand the nation; as a businessman, he has\nTHOMAS V. KASKIE\ntaken an active and important part in the\nTrumbull\nWILLIAM C. KEATOR\npolitical process.\nFairfield\nCHARLES B. KENTNOR\nIt would add immeasurably to the\nFairfield\nAARON A. LEVINE\nsignificance of the occasion if we could read\nTrumbull\na message from you commending his civic and\nA. GEORGE LINDQUIST\npolitical contributions and wishing him well\nEaston\nRONALD A. MALONY\nin his candidecy. May we count on you for\nFairfield\nthis favor?\nKENNETH A. MALONEY\nFairfield\nHAMILTON MERRILL\nSincerely,\nFairfield\nLLOYD H. MEYER\nNichols\nELNATHAN MITCHELL\nwilliam William Scholz, scholy\nFairfield\nRAYMOND MOORE\nCampaign Manager\nTrumbull\nNORMAN K. PARSELLS\nFairfield\nWS:pn\nJ. BALDWIN PEARSON\nEnclosure\nFairfield\nALVIN W. PECK\nEaston\nLOUIS RAYMOND\nFoirfield\nRICHARD L. REVENAUGH\nFairfield\nDONALD SAMMIS\nStratford\nFRED B. SILLIMAN\nFoirfield\nEARLE W. SMITH\nBridgeport\nDEVER C. WARNER\nFairfield\n26\nApril 24, 1962\nDear Mr. Zeigler:\nDick Nixon has asked me to\nexpress his thanks for your thoughtfulness in\nwriting him about the Christensen campaign.\nUnfortunately, your letter did\nnot reach us in time for us to get this explanation\nX X File:\n1\nback to you before the breakfast meeting planned\ntoday at the Olympic Hotel. However, the policy\nwe have had to establish would have prevented\ndate\nZ\nthe requested wire being sent, since there can be\nno involvement in out-of-state campaigns.\nWe feel certain you will under-\nstand what we believe to be the only fair and just\nmethod of handling this and many other similar\nrequests.\nWith kind regards and good wishes.\nof\nSincerely,\nH. R. Haldeman\nMr. Jack Zeigler\nState Campaign Chairman\nRichard G. Christensen Headquarters\n308 Orpheum Building\nSeattle 1, Washington\nEndorsements fill\nINTER-OFFICE MEMORANDUM\nNixon for Governor\nTo:\nH. R. Haldeman\nDate: April 20, 1962\nFrom:\nLoie Gaunt Lgg\nSubject:\nattached message request from State of Washington\nDistribution:\nIf Christensen has any primary competition, am sure wire should not be sent. Source and\ntime to check that part out, I do not have.\nIf you determine that wire should be sent and will have Dorothy let me know, I could\nsend one along lines of: Greatly pleased with reports of the vigor and enthusiasm\nof your campaign for the U.S. Senate, I know you will keep up KYE the good work.\nBest wishes for success, Regards, Dick Nixon -- or whatever you suggest.\nHowever, if no wire to go, would like to leave in your hands to either ignore or\nTD over your signature.\nJack Zeigler has been active in RN campaigns in the past; how much and how effectively,\nI do not know.\nYOUNG AMERICANS FOR\nRICHARD G. CHRISTENSEN\nHEADQUARTERS - P.O. BOX 181 EDMONDS, WASHINGTON\nSTATE CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS\nREPUBLICAN CANDIDATE\n308 Orpheum Building\nFOR U.S. SENATE\nSeattle 1, Washington\nApril 17, 1962\nMr. Richard M. Nixon\nc/o Adams, Duke & Hazeltine\n522 West 6th Street\nLos Angeles, California\nDear Mr. Nixon:\nThe Christensen Campaign is gathering real momentum!\nA spectacular event, a well-attended breakfast meeting,\nto meet and hear \"Dick\", will be held on Tuesday, April 24th.\nat 7:30 A. M. in the Georgian Room of the Olympic Hotel,\nSeattle, Washington. One thousand invitations have been\nissued to concerned individuals in this area.\nDick is campaigning vigorously and is gathering strength\neverywhere in his fight to unseat Warren G. Magnuson, U. S.\nSenator of Washington State, Democrat.\nA wire of encouragement from a person of your political\nstature would be most welcome. This will be greatly appre-\nciated by Dick and the rest of us, devoted to working for\nhim to win.\nSincerely yours,\nJack Zeigler\nSTATE CAMPAION CHAIRMAN\nJZ/ez\nLat\non\n\"A New Concept\nIn Politics\"\nRICHARD G. CHRISTENSEN\nRepublican Candidate for the\nNomination to the U.S. Senate"
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